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What you need to know about moisture content in timbers
While our focus is on selling timber trusses, beams, timbers, mantles, corbels, ceiling & siding lumber, reclaimed timber and barnwood, our team makes
a concerted effort to teach our customers things about lumber and timber that make their choices easier and logical.
Ryan Wholesale, Inc. 800-799-3237
Moisture content in timbers (not framing lumber), is one of the least understood specifications seen in many plans.
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19% Moisture Content:
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This is a spec for framing lumber, and is based on design values that depend on the MC to improve
strength. 2” to 4” thick lumber can, and is, dried to a consistent 19% throughout the piece.
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Timbers above this size are very difficult to dry beyond the first couple of inches on each side, and in fact
the 19% moisture content can only be achieved by drying the timber in a Radio Frequency Vacuum Kiln
(wood dried this way is referred to as RFKD). This is like a huge microwave with hydraulic hold-downs that
help to keep the wood from twisting as it dries in the RFK. There are only 2 of these facilities in North
America - one in Canada, and one in the Pacific Northwest. The kilns are expensive (about $2M for one
the size of a shipping container), so consequently the process may add as much as 200-300% (or more) to
the cost of a job (including freight costs). We have found that timbers dried in this process have surface
tensions distorted in the drying process, and do not lend themselves well to additional cutting after the fact.
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What is Surface Drying?
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Surface Drying gets the MC to a 19% level in the outside 2” layer but the interior of the timber is still
“green”, and this moisture will come out over time as the piece continues to dry, which can still lead to
instability in the timber down the road.
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What is Air Drying?
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Timbers sometimes are touted as “Air Dried”. This is (in best cases), where the timbers are placed on
stacking sticks and left in an open warehouse for a period of months. The outcome is similar to Surface
Drying, but with a little more inconsistency.
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What is “standing dead” timber?
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This is a term that refers to logging only dead trees that are still standing in the forest. Although this
sounds great, there can still be issues with this type of timber. Once a tree dies (there is usually a disease
issue causing this), insects such as borers attack the tree and lay eggs in the wood. Some species of
borers may take up to 15-30 years to hatch from the wood they’re laid in, not the kind of surprise you hope
to have in your home.
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Why does my Architect or Engineer specify 19% MC?
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This is the industry standard for “Framing Lumer”, and the benchmark in all grading rules and design value
tables - it’s simply assumed that 19% can be easily achieved for timbers as well.
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What happens in my project over time, and how can I be assured of the most stable timber product?
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Once the AC is turned on, your timbers will really start to dry and at this point you encounter the possibility
of checking (cracks), twisting, or other instability.
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OK, I get it but what can I do to make sure I have trouble-free timbers? The answer is in this specification